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WASHINGTON (AP) -Everyone agreed what the pitch should be.
Closer
Joel Hanrahan
, catcher
Jose Flores
and pitching coach Randy St. Claire were of one mind: The
Washington Nationals
would finally secure their first winning streak of 2009 by getting the final out with a first-pitch slider to Atlanta's
Yunel Escobar
.
So what did Hanrahan do? He threw a fastball. And yet, because right now - well, for the past two nights, anyway - things
are going Washington's way, and more specifically its bullpen's way, Escobar swung and smacked the ball right to the second
baseman for a simple groundout. Game over, and the Nationals beat the Braves 4-3 Tuesday night for their second consecutive
victory.
''Flores said he didn't know what he was going to do if the guy didn't hit the ball, because it probably was going to hit
him in the throat. But (Escobar) put the ball in play, and he got the out,'' Washington manager Manny Acta said. ''Those are
the kind of things that, when you're meant to win, it happens.''
After opening the season 0-7, then dropping to 1-10, Washington is 3-10. Atlanta is headed in the opposite direction, having
lost five of its past six games.
''Anytime you lose like that, it's frustrating,'' Atlanta manager
Bobby Cox
said. ''We didn't play a real clean game tonight.''
Played following a 61-minute rain delay, this game was filled with all sorts of miscues: three errors, other fielding misadventures,
a few running mistakes, failed sacrifice bunt attempts and more.
Shairon Martis
(2-0) went six innings and gave up three runs - two earned. Then came the procession of Nationals relievers, providing three
scoreless innings for the second day in a row.
Mike Hinckley
went 1 2-3 innings,
Julian Tavarez
got one out, and Hanrahan had an adventurous ninth. But after a walk and double put two runners on with none out, Hanrahan
got pinch-hitter
Greg Norton
on a comebacker,
Kelly Johnson
on a flyball to center, and - after St. Claire visited the mound to lay out a plan that would soon be abandoned - Escobar.
''I kind of made the fire for myself and was fortunate to get out of it,'' said Hanrahan, who entered this season with nine
career saves.
He has converted his last two save chances after blowing his first two of the season.
''We need him,'' Flores said. ''I think he was putting a little bit of pressure on himself. But we can see that he's trusting
himself again.''
The Nationals gave away ninth-inning leads Friday, Saturday and Sunday in losses to the
Florida Marlins
, precipitating a revamping of Washington's relief corps.
''Especially with happened over the weekend,'' Hanrahan said, ''another one of those, and who knows what would have happened?''
Hinckley, Tavarez and Hanrahan were not part of the series of roster moves. Clearly, though, they heard the team's message.
''Oh, yeah. It's either you get the job done or they're going to go another route,'' Hinckley said. ''And I'm thankful to
be here.''
Martis worked his way in and out of trouble, but he only allowed runs in the first - three of them, thanks in part to two
walks. After that, though, the Braves wouldn't score again.
The Nationals eventually got to Atlanta starter
Kenshin Kawakami
(1-2). Flores' RBI double made it 3-1 in the second, and Kawakami didn't record an out in the sixth.
Adam Dunn
led off with his fourth homer.
Elijah Dukes
reached on third baseman
Chipper Jones
' fielding error, and
Austin Kearns
followed with a sinking liner that skipped past left fielder
Matt Diaz
for an RBI triple that tied things 3-all.
''In my career, I think I lost four balls in the lights - and this year I've already lost three,'' Diaz said.
Jeff Bennett
entered and got two outs, before giving up the go-ahead run on pinch-hitter
Josh Willingham
's single to left.
''It was big,'' Willingham said. ''Pinch hitting's hard. It's something I'm getting used to the more that I do it.''
The same could be said about the Nationals and winning.
After this victory, music was blaring over the speakers in the clubhouse ceiling - Green Day, Jay-Z, Kanye West.
And Acta was thinking about how close his team could be to .500.
''I'm not a big 'What if?' guy, but you can't help it to think that we blew three games over the weekend,'' Acta said. ''This
could be a six-game winning streak right now.''
Notes: LHP
Joe Beimel
is the seventh Nationals player to go on the DL. ''I don't believe in negative stuff,'' Acta said, ''but I was wondering if
somebody buried a Red Cross jersey here before they built this stadium because it's kind of, I don't know, weird.''
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